Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka
4.1K posts

Chris Pieczonka
@griffoncanisius
Ceo @ampofny; Clin trials director USUP: Jesuit trained...@ubuffalo alum...Dad of 3 lovely daughters...Loves Pinball, @WWE,@buffalobills & @buffalosabres…Yeet!
Syracuse, NY Katılım Mart 2011
3.6K Takip Edilen434 Takipçiler
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi

Join me at #AUA26 this Sunday at 3:30–4:00 PM, in the Learning Lab – AUA Square, where my esteemed colleagues and I will discuss the rechARge trial in mCRPC patients.
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Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi

An antiviral pill has, for the first time, been shown to prevent COVID-19 in people exposed to the SARS-CoV-2 virus
go.nature.com/4nAMi6g
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Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi

The Hibachi chef didn't just understand the assignment; he rewrote the syllabus.
I came for the fried rice, but I stayed for the Shaggy cover. This is the level of enthusiasm I need in my life every single day. If your chef isn't dropping bars while flipping shrimp, are you even out to dinner?
10/10 service. No notes.
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Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi

Everyone’s seeing the Hantavirus news and immediately panicking so let’s talk about what’s actually happening before fear takes over
Yes there is a real hantavirus outbreak linked to a cruise ship in the Atlantic, and sadly, three people have died. That is serious. But fear spreads faster than facts, so here’s what you need to understand
Hantavirus has a high mortality rate, which is why healthcare workers are reacting strongly online. After surviving the chaos of COVID, many nurses are saying they simply don’t have the emotional energy for another global health crisis especially after how underappreciated and overworked they’ve been for years
But here’s the key difference: hantavirus does not spread like COVID. It is not airborne like the flu or a cold. You do not catch it by casually sitting next to someone on a plane or walking through an airport. The virus is typically spread through direct contact with infected rodents, their droppings, or infected bodily fluids
A lot of people are asking: What if someone traveled while infected and spread it to others?
That’s a fair question and it’s exactly why health authorities are conducting contact tracing right now. However, widespread transmission has not been reported because this virus does not spread easily from person to person in normal public settings
When reports say the virus has reached Europe, it means an infected passenger from the ship is being treated there in isolation while close contacts are monitored. If this were spreading rapidly through flights, airports or communities the world would already be seeing clusters of new cases. So far that is not happening
So no, you do not need to panic-buy supplies. You do not need to spiral every time you read a headline. The professionals handling this situation are doing exactly what they’re trained to do

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Chris Pieczonka retweetledi
Chris Pieczonka retweetledi

We put a new spin on the 1975 classic “We’re Gonna Win That Cup” 🏒
(originally written by Tommy Calandra + performed by Donna McDaniel)
It’s up on YouTube now 🎥
streaming everywhere soon
No jinxes…only good vibes.
Now let’s take on the Habs.
LET’S GO SABRES 💙💛 #LetsGoBuffalo youtu.be/Q3GDp7DSCVs?si…

YouTube
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Chris Pieczonka retweetledi

Left behind in Kabul. Alone. He waited 47 days.
K-9 Chaos was not a dog who did his job. He was a dog who had DECIDED, completely, permanently, without reservation, that Lieutenant Marcus Webb was coming back for him. No matter how long it took.
At Hamid Karzai International Airport, Kabul, on the morning of August 30th, 2021, a three-year-old Belgian Malinois sat in an empty aircraft hangar. The last American plane had left six hours ago. The evacuation was over.
Chaos had been left behind.
Not intentionally. The chaos of the withdrawal. The panic. The rush. Webb had been separated from Chaos during the final evacuation. Put on a different plane. Told Chaos would be on the next flight.
There was no next flight.
Chaos survived the first day alone. Waiting at the hangar where Webb had left him.
Chaos survived the first week. Scavenging food from abandoned military supplies.
Chaos survived 47 days in Taliban-controlled Kabul. Alone. Hiding. Waiting.
Because Chaos survived on the belief that Webb wouldn't leave him forever.
Back in the United States, Webb was losing his mind. Filed reports. Called congressmen. Contacted rescue organizations. Went on the news.
"I left my dog in Afghanistan," he said on CNN, his voice breaking. "I left my brother. And I'm going to get him back."
The military said it was impossible. Kabul had fallen. Taliban controlled the airport. No way to extract a dog.
Webb didn't care about impossible.
He contacted Pineapple Express, a veteran-run extraction operation. Gave them Chaos's last known location. Sent photos. Videos. Anything that could help.
For 47 days, Webb didn't sleep. Didn't eat properly. Just waited for news.
On October 16th, 2021, his phone rang.
"We found him," the voice said. "We found Chaos."
A rescue team had infiltrated Kabul. Used Webb's intel. Found Chaos still at the hangar. Still waiting. Forty-seven days later.
Chaos was emaciated. Dehydrated. Traumatized.
But alive.
The extraction took three days. Smuggling Chaos out of Taliban-controlled territory. Through checkpoints. Through danger.
But they got him out.
On October 19th, 2021, Chaos landed at Dulles International Airport. Webb was waiting on the tarmac.
When they opened the crate, Chaos didn't move. Stared at Webb like he was seeing a ghost.
"It's me, brother," Webb said, kneeling down. "I came back. I promised I'd come back."
Chaos stepped out slowly. Walked to Webb. Collapsed into his arms.
The reunion video went viral. Seventeen million views in three days.
But what people didn't see was what happened after.
For six months, Chaos wouldn't sleep unless Webb was in the room. Wouldn't eat unless Webb fed him. Wouldn't go outside unless Webb went first.
"He's terrified I'll leave him again," Webb said in an interview. "And I don't blame him. I left him once. In the worst place. At the worst time. He waited 47 days for me. And I'll spend the rest of my life making sure he knows I'm never leaving again."
Three years later, Chaos still sleeps with his head on Webb's chest. Still follows him everywhere.
Still making sure Webb doesn't disappear.
K-9 Chaos. Survived 47 days alone in Kabul. Extracted by heroes. Reunited with his handler. Home.
facebook.com/share/1HLX9dCv…
#LostAndFound
#doglover #seniordogs #animalwelfare #militarydog #k9hero #dogrescue #Kabul #47Days #LeftBehind #BroughtHome

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Chris Pieczonka retweetledi

I don’t know how to make it happen, but I need to stay in the castle suite for a night in my lifetime. 🏰
🎥 kristarose143 #TikTok tiktok.com/t/ZP8gsrVPo/
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